| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240 | <?php/** * @defgroup themeable Default theme implementations * @{ * Functions and templates for the user interface to be implemented by themes. * * Drupal's presentation layer is a pluggable system known as the theme * layer. Each theme can take control over most of Drupal's output, and * has complete control over the CSS. * * Inside Drupal, the theme layer is utilized by the use of the theme() * function, which is passed the name of a component (the theme hook) * and an array of variables. For example, * theme('table', array('header' => $header, 'rows' => $rows)); * Additionally, the theme() function can take an array of theme * hooks, which can be used to provide 'fallback' implementations to * allow for more specific control of output. For example, the function: * theme(array('table__foo', 'table'), $variables) would look to see if * 'table__foo' is registered anywhere; if it is not, it would 'fall back' * to the generic 'table' implementation. This can be used to attach specific * theme functions to named objects, allowing the themer more control over * specific types of output. * * As of Drupal 6, every theme hook is required to be registered by the * module that owns it, so that Drupal can tell what to do with it and * to make it simple for themes to identify and override the behavior * for these calls. * * The theme hooks are registered via hook_theme(), which returns an * array of arrays with information about the hook. It describes the * arguments the function or template will need, and provides * defaults for the template in case they are not filled in. If the default * implementation is a function, by convention it is named theme_HOOK(). * * Each module should provide a default implementation for theme_hooks that * it registers. This implementation may be either a function or a template; * if it is a function it must be specified via hook_theme(). By convention, * default implementations of theme hooks are named theme_HOOK. Default * template implementations are stored in the module directory. * * Drupal's default template renderer is a simple PHP parsing engine that * includes the template and stores the output. Drupal's theme engines * can provide alternate template engines, such as XTemplate, Smarty and * PHPTal. The most common template engine is PHPTemplate (included with * Drupal and implemented in phptemplate.engine, which uses Drupal's default * template renderer. * * In order to create theme-specific implementations of these hooks, themes can * implement their own version of theme hooks, either as functions or templates. * These implementations will be used instead of the default implementation. If * using a pure .theme without an engine, the .theme is required to implement * its own version of hook_theme() to tell Drupal what it is implementing; * themes utilizing an engine will have their well-named theming functions * automatically registered for them. While this can vary based upon the theme * engine, the standard set by phptemplate is that theme functions should be * named THEMENAME_HOOK. For example, for Drupal's default theme (Bartik) to * implement the 'table' hook, the phptemplate.engine would find * bartik_table(). * * The theme system is described and defined in theme.inc. * * @see theme() * @see hook_theme() * @see hooks * @see callbacks * * @} End of "defgroup themeable". *//** * Allow themes to alter the theme-specific settings form. * * With this hook, themes can alter the theme-specific settings form in any way * allowable by Drupal's Form API, such as adding form elements, changing * default values and removing form elements. See the Form API documentation on * api.drupal.org for detailed information. * * Note that the base theme's form alterations will be run before any sub-theme * alterations. * * @param $form *   Nested array of form elements that comprise the form. * @param $form_state *   A keyed array containing the current state of the form. */function hook_form_system_theme_settings_alter(&$form, &$form_state) {  // Add a checkbox to toggle the breadcrumb trail.  $form['toggle_breadcrumb'] = array(    '#type' => 'checkbox',    '#title' => t('Display the breadcrumb'),    '#default_value' => theme_get_setting('toggle_breadcrumb'),    '#description'   => t('Show a trail of links from the homepage to the current page.'),  );}/** * Preprocess theme variables for templates. * * This hook allows modules to preprocess theme variables for theme templates. * It is called for all theme hooks implemented as templates, but not for theme * hooks implemented as functions. hook_preprocess_HOOK() can be used to * preprocess variables for a specific theme hook, whether implemented as a * template or function. * * For more detailed information, see theme(). * * @param $variables *   The variables array (modify in place). * @param $hook *   The name of the theme hook. */function hook_preprocess(&$variables, $hook) { static $hooks;  // Add contextual links to the variables, if the user has permission.  if (!user_access('access contextual links')) {    return;  }  if (!isset($hooks)) {    $hooks = theme_get_registry();  }  // Determine the primary theme function argument.  if (isset($hooks[$hook]['variables'])) {    $keys = array_keys($hooks[$hook]['variables']);    $key = $keys[0];  }  else {    $key = $hooks[$hook]['render element'];  }  if (isset($variables[$key])) {    $element = $variables[$key];  }  if (isset($element) && is_array($element) && !empty($element['#contextual_links'])) {    $variables['title_suffix']['contextual_links'] = contextual_links_view($element);    if (!empty($variables['title_suffix']['contextual_links'])) {      $variables['classes_array'][] = 'contextual-links-region';    }  }}/** * Preprocess theme variables for a specific theme hook. * * This hook allows modules to preprocess theme variables for a specific theme * hook. It should only be used if a module needs to override or add to the * theme preprocessing for a theme hook it didn't define. * * For more detailed information, see theme(). * * @param $variables *   The variables array (modify in place). */function hook_preprocess_HOOK(&$variables) {  // This example is from rdf_preprocess_image(). It adds an RDF attribute  // to the image hook's variables.  $variables['attributes']['typeof'] = array('foaf:Image');}/** * Process theme variables for templates. * * This hook allows modules to process theme variables for theme templates. It * is called for all theme hooks implemented as templates, but not for theme * hooks implemented as functions. hook_process_HOOK() can be used to process * variables for a specific theme hook, whether implemented as a template or * function. * * For more detailed information, see theme(). * * @param $variables *   The variables array (modify in place). * @param $hook *   The name of the theme hook. */function hook_process(&$variables, $hook) {  // Wraps variables in RDF wrappers.  if (!empty($variables['rdf_template_variable_attributes_array'])) {    foreach ($variables['rdf_template_variable_attributes_array'] as $variable_name => $attributes) {      $context = array(        'hook' => $hook,        'variable_name' => $variable_name,        'variables' => $variables,      );      $variables[$variable_name] = theme('rdf_template_variable_wrapper', array('content' => $variables[$variable_name], 'attributes' => $attributes, 'context' => $context));    }  }}/** * Process theme variables for a specific theme hook. * * This hook allows modules to process theme variables for a specific theme * hook. It should only be used if a module needs to override or add to the * theme processing for a theme hook it didn't define. * * For more detailed information, see theme(). * * @param $variables *   The variables array (modify in place). */function hook_process_HOOK(&$variables) {  // @todo There are no use-cases in Drupal core for this hook. Find one from a  //   contributed module, or come up with a good example. Coming up with a good  //   example might be tough, since the intent is for nearly everything to be  //   achievable via preprocess functions, and for process functions to only be  //   used when requiring the later execution time.}/** * Respond to themes being enabled. * * @param array $theme_list *   Array containing the names of the themes being enabled. * * @see theme_enable() */function hook_themes_enabled($theme_list) {  foreach ($theme_list as $theme) {    block_theme_initialize($theme);  }}/** * Respond to themes being disabled. * * @param array $theme_list *   Array containing the names of the themes being disabled. * * @see theme_disable() */function hook_themes_disabled($theme_list) { // Clear all update module caches.  _update_cache_clear();}
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